2004 Nobel Prize in Physics
Three Americans share the Nobel prize in physics this year for work in quantum physics.
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Prize in Physics for 2004 "for the discovery of asymptotic freedom in
the theory of the strong interaction" jointly to:
David J. Gross
Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics, University of California, Santa Barbara, USA,
H. David Politzer
California Institute of Technology (Caltech), Pasadena, USA, and
Frank Wilczek
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Cambridge, USA.
A 'colourful' discovery in the world of quarks
What are the smallest building blocks in Nature? How do these particles
build up everything we see around us? What forces act in Nature and how
do they actually function?
This year's Nobel Prize in Physics deals with these fundamental
questions, problems that occupied physicists throughout the 20th
century and still challenge both theoreticians and experimentalists
working at the major particle accelerators.
David Gross, David Politzer and Frank Wilczek have made an important
theoretical discovery concerning the strong force, or the 'colour
force' as it is also called. The strong force is the one that is
dominant in the atomic nucleus, acting between the quarks inside the
proton and the neutron.
What this year's Laureates discovered was
something that, at first sight, seemed completely contradictory. The
interpretation of their mathematical result was that the closer the
quarks are to each other, the weaker is the 'colour charge'. When the
quarks are really close to each other, the force is so weak that they
behave almost as free particles. This phenomenon is called "asymptotic
freedom". The converse is true when the quarks move apart: the force
becomes stronger when the distance increases. This property may be
compared to a rubber band. The more the band is stretched, the stronger
the force.
This discovery was expressed in 1973 in an elegant mathematical
framework that led to a completely new theory, Quantum ChromoDynamics,
QCD. This theory was an important contribution to the Standard Model,
the theory that describes all physics connected with the
electromagnetic force (which acts between charged particles), the weak
force (which is important for the sun's energy production) and the
strong force (which acts between quarks). With the aid of QCD
physicists can at last explain why quarks only behave as free particles
at extremely high energies. In the proton and the neutron they always
occur in triplets.
Thanks to their discovery, David Gross, David Politzer and Frank
Wilczek have brought physics one step closer to fulfilling a grand
dream, to formulate a unified theory comprising gravity as well - a
theory for everything.
About the Laureates
David J. Gross, born 1941 (aged 63) in Washington DC, USA (American
citizen). Doctor's degree in physics in 1966 at the University of
California, Berkeley. Professor at the Kavli Institute for Theoretical
Physics at the University of California, Santa Barbara, USA.
H. David Politzer, (American citizen). Doctor's degree in physics in
1974 at Harvard University. Professor at the Department of Physics,
California Institute of Technology (Caltech), Pasadena CA, USA.
Frank Wilczek, born 1951 (aged 53) in Queens, New York, USA (American
citizen). Doctor's degree in physics in 1974 at Princeton University.
Professor at the Department of Physics, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology (MIT), Cambridge MA, USA.
Prize amount: SEK 10 million, will be shared equally among the Laureates.
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